RE: [xsl] Unicode and child element

Subject: RE: [xsl] Unicode and child element
From: "Pankaj Chaturvedi" <pankaj.chaturvedi@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 29 Aug 2008 16:16:49 +0530
I did it other way around.

Having a bad day. Sorry to bother you guys. 
Please ignore it.
  
-----Original Message-----
From: Pankaj Chaturvedi [mailto:pankaj.chaturvedi@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 4:02 PM
To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [xsl] Unicode and child element

 
Thanks Ken. But it also doesn't seems to be working. 

Personally I do not have any problem with defining function and would not
like to omit it as I am using it at various places. The only thing which
worrying me is with mode <xsl:apply-templates mode="New-one"/> and without
mode <xsl:apply-templates/>.

I am expecting error here. Let me try it again.

Best,

Pankaj Chaturvedi

============================================================================
================


-----Original Message-----
From: G. Ken Holman [mailto:gkholman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2008 6:35 PM
To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [xsl] Unicode and child element

I get the impression that you have copied a partial solution to your problem
because only one step is missing, yet the result evidence you present seems
not to match what the code you have would produce.  I'll just focus my
answer on your code and not on your evidence.

At 2008-08-28 17:51 +0530, Pankaj Chaturvedi wrote:
><xsl:function name="my:reverse-string">
>         <xsl:param name="arg"/>
>                 <xsl:sequence
>select="replace(codepoints-to-string(string-to-codepoints($arg)),
>'\[#x([0-9A-Za-z]+)\]', '&#xE000;#x$1;')"/> </xsl:function>

Okay, the above does *not* put "[#xUUUU]" into the result tree as you
contend.

It puts "&#xE000;UUUU;" into the result tree.

I gather you want "&UUUU;" in the serialized version of the result tree.

Using &#xE000; is a typical approach to using output character maps in
serialization to get file results that are not possible using default
serialization.

>...
>I've done it earlier but seems to be completely lost today (may be tired).

It looks to me like what you probably did was:

   <xsl:output use-character-maps="escape-my-numeric-character-reference"/>

   <xsl:character-map name="escape-my-numeric-character-reference">
     <xsl:output-character character="&#xe000;" string="&amp;"/>
   </xsl:character-map>

I hope this helps.

. . . . . . . . . . Ken

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